The United States and Russia have persuaded Syria's government and moderate rebels to extend the country's fragile truce to the northern city of Aleppo, although sporadic clashes continue, US officials said on Wednesday.
The agreement was reached late Tuesday and took effect at 12:01 am Wednesday Damascus time (7 am EDT), said the officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorised to publicly discuss the diplomatic developments.
A formal announcement was expected later on Wednesday.
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How important the partial truce proves will depend on its durability. The US and Russia finalised a nationwide cease-fire in late February, but have struggled to make it stick.
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On Tuesday, Secretary of State John Kerry expressed hope for a more sustainable arrangement.
Three people were killed on Wednesday in renewed shelling by Syrian rebels of government-held areas in Aleppo, state media and opposition activists said.
The violence in Syria's largest city and once its key commercial centre has continued for almost two weeks despite intense diplomatic efforts to restore the cease-fire. The UN Security Council also was due to meet later Wednesday to discuss the escalation.
The US officials said that they had seen a decrease in violence since Tuesday night's extension of the cessation of hostilities, as diplomats are calling it. But they acknowledged violations persisting in some areas of the country.
The deal on Aleppo follows reaffirmations earlier this week of truces in the Damascus suburbs and coastal Latakia province.
None of the deals applies to the Islamic State group or the Nusra Front, al-Qaida's Syria affiliate, which has caused problems in places such as Aleppo.
In some battles there and elsewhere, Western and Arab-backed militants have fought alongside those swearing allegiance to al-Qaida, making it hard to determine which Syrian government offensives or Russian airstrikes constitute violations.
Nearly 300 people have been killed during this latest spate of violence in Aleppo. Over the past two weeks, hospitals and civilian areas in the divided city have come under attack from government warplanes, as well as rebel shelling.